Announcing the launch of cohort 4 of the Conscious Venture Lab. We are a 4-month on-site accelerator program in Baltimore, MD.

DEAL: $50K in return for 8% Equity

Issues like overtaxed civic infrastructure, financial access, high unemployment, intractable violence, transportation, access to health care and food and water shortages are making city living continually more difficult. At the same time as a society we are increasingly returning to urban living. The Conscious Venture Lab is focused on supporting companies that are both operating at the intersection of profit and purpose, and looking to improve the resilience of cities. We are looking for entrepreneurs who want to impact the his way we all live together. Who want to find new ways to use technology to increase economic opportunity and who want to create more livable and equitable urban environments.

Following the theme of Urban Resilience and Smart Cities, we are looking for companies focused on the way technological and business model innovations can be put to work and address chronic stresses which we see in our cities.

Areas of focus are:
If you are an entrepreneur or company operating in one of the following areas, please apply to be a part of our 4th cohort of the Conscious Venture Lab.

You begin investing at VIRAL Level:

1: You back the jockey, not the horse

You back strong founding teams with a solid idea.

Where you can add the most value to entrepreneurs at this stage:

Lived experience with the problem:

Teams will often make assumptions about their target customer and their problem without actually having a deep understanding of the real issue the customer faces and whether their solution solves it. If there isn’t a strong member of the core team who deeply understands the customer, you should encourage that they bring such a member onto their team.

Customer, customer, customer :

Make sure your team is spending all of their time with customers at the beginning. Encourage them to get out of the lab and get a minimum prototype in the hands of customers as quickly as possible to test whether they are even on the right track.

Common questions you should consider asking in due diligence:

How do we know that your team has the experience to solve the problem?

What experience have you had with this problem yourself – how do you know this is actually a problem, and who has this problem? What can you share about your experience with this market? How can you give us confidence that you know how the market operates?

What is the specific problem you’re solving–for your customer?

Too many ideas are a solution that’s looking for a problem to solve. Who is your customer? What is their problem? How does your solution solve their problem? Let’s take, for example, Google. “We sell consumer data to advertisers. Advertisers have a problem, and it is that they don’t know how to reach the right audience online. We solve this problem through the world’s best search engine, which gives advertisers highly customized information.”

What’s your plan to get the idea in front of customers?

Get tactical about the next three, six, nine months. How many people will they talk to? When will the product or service be ready to sell? What do they know now? What do they not know and need to find out? What do they need to raise money to find out. And what will they spend it on?